Authorities in Belarus warned their citizens that they should only use Georgian entrance points when visiting Abkhazia and South Ossetia, according to reports in the country's press.
Although few visitors will be affected, the move is seen as an insult to Russia and an overture to the EU and US.
Abkhazia and South Ossetia seceded from Georgia following a five-day war in August 2008 and have since been recognised only by Russia - which de facto controls the two regions - and Nicaragua.
Grigory Karasin, Russia's deputy minister of foreign affairs, called the Belarus recommendation "strange". "After what we had been told by the Belarusian government earlier, this [move] seems illogical," the Russian diplomat said, quoted by Interfax.
Russia-Belarus union shelved
This was not the only move Belarus made to woo Western powers. On Thursday (23 July), Lukashenko received foreign ambassadors in Minsk and told them that a project for a state union between Belarus and Russia hit an impasse.
The Russian daily Kommersant remarked that Lukashenko has in fact shelved this geo-strategic project.
Dmitry Polikanov, a political analyst from Russia's Centre of Political Studies, told the Russia Today website that in his opinion Belarus was putting pressure on Russia in a bargaining game.
"Belarus has always been Russia's major ally on the post-Soviet space […] Belarus' economy is highly dependent on economic aid from Russia. Belarus has always been fond of bargaining, and maybe we are now witnessing a new stage of Russia-Belarus relations," Poliakov said.
After Lukashenko rejected Moscow's pressure to recognise Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the EU has lifted some sanctions against his country, including a travel ban on Lukashenko and other officials, writes Russia Today in an editorial. It adds that after new overtures, Lukashenko hopes that Washington might also become amiable.



